Adhoc President No-Show in Court, Missing From Cambodia
Cambodia Daily | 25October 2016
The president of rights group Adhoc was a no-show at the Phnom Penh
Municipal Court yesterday for questioning in a case in which four of his
staff members face bribery charges over a sex scandal involving CNRP
Vice President Kem Sokha.
Thun Saray was on an extended mission to
Canada and had asked to postpone his appearance while he was overseas,
an Adhoc official said.
Court
spokesman Ly Sophana confirmed Mr. Saray did not appear to answer
questions following a summons, and said the judge would continue to
investigate the case. He did not respond to further requests for
comment.
Latt Ky, Adhoc’s land and natural resource manager, said the purpose of Mr. Saray’s visit to Canada was “not quite clear,” but Mr. Saray had appointed his secretary-general, In Kea, as acting president.
“I know only that he stays in Canada, but I don’t know
more details of what he’s working for…. I have not been in contact with
him for a while,” Mr. Ky said, declining to say how long Mr. Saray had
been outside the country.
Mr. Kea could not be reached, while several other Adhoc officials declined to comment.
Preap Kol, the executive director of Transparency International Cambodia, said communications with Mr. Saray had been disrupted.
“I haven’t been in touch with him for so, so long,” he said. “I don’t know where he is.”
Him
Yun, coordinator for the Coalition for Integrity and Social
Accountability, an anti-corruption group, said he had not seen Mr. Saray
since his colleagues were charged, but believed he had been “living
with his children in Canada” since his colleagues’ arrest.
Adhoc’s
head of monitoring, Ny Sokha, his deputies Nay Vanda and Yi Soksan, and
senior investigator Lim Mony were arrested in April along with National
Election Committee deputy secretary-general Ny Chakrya and accused of paying the opposition lawmaker’s alleged mistress to lie to officials about a supposed affair.
The
charges are believed to stem from the $204 the officials gave the
alleged mistress, Khem Chandaraty, while representing her after the case
went public—and before Ms. Chandaraty admitted the affair to officials
and gave information about the five accused.
Adhoc has denied the
charges and remained tight-lipped about the case, which is widely seen
as a politically motivated assault on government critics.
Mr.
Saray’s long absence from the country has negatively affected Adhoc’s
ability to address human rights, which have been decaying in recent
months—as noted by the U.N., Mr. Yun said.
“While the president is away from the office, it’s not so easy to do all kinds of work,” he said.
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